Landlocked

Midsummer. The sky’s again contused

and cloudless, still dizzy with mirages

 

heaving on patches of surviving grass,

on scattered heaps of backyard crates,

 

on the rust-gnawed remains of a Firebird

I dig through. I exhume and lift a carburetor

 

to my ear, shake it softly like a seashell,

and hear unexpected waves crackling

 

against themselves. There are hungry seagulls

squatting motionless in the air, cruise ships

 

horning their way punctually into port,

sunburnt tourists unfolding their bodies

 

like beach chairs, flinging their foreign laughs

and lingo at the gurgled crash of foam.

 

Like all things imaginary though, this scene

wasn’t built to hold, so I grip the serrated sides

 

more maraca-like, nauseate the shore

till my hands begin to ache, till the sea

 

regurgitates archipelagos of thrown plastic,

dead fish and sailors, legends of shipwrecks

 

the moon-drunk tides have anchored to asterisks

of sand; every message-in-a-bottle backwashed

 

like an oil spill. I bend down, pick them up,

and like God after every plague, every flood,

 

survey this altered version of my backyard.

What is paradise but the history we never see,

 

themed hotels, glossy strips of restaurants

and palm trees? An island easier to picture

 

than this accidental scrapyard, stacked

and used-car parts I try to salvage, dragging

 

out slabs of jagged steel as if they were shark

victims, as if I were here to save them,

 

to bring back a world I imagine

one day will believe in me.


Also by Esteban Rodríguez

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